Archive for Morning Links

Teen bike rider murdered in deliberate hit-and-run, Canadian bike lane madness, and assess bike/ped safety in your town

Just 35 days until Los Angeles fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 
But so far, no LA city leader has even mentioned the impending deadline. Let alone done anything about it. 

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If you missed it over the weekend — and that was easy to do, given the relatively minimal press coverage — a 16-year old boy was murdered by a driver who deliberately ran down his bike in LA’s Exposition Park on Friday.

The boy was part of a group of around 40 kids who got into some sort of altercation with a road-raging driver while riding south Figueroa Street, just above Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd, allegedly breaking the car’s mirror.

The teens rode through a gap in the fence surrounding BMO Stadium in an effort to get away from the driver. But the driver followed them into the parking lot and slammed into the victim, then fled afterwards.

The victim died at the scene.

To make this horrific, needless tragedy even worse — if that is even possible — the boy reportedly had nothing to do with the dispute on the roadway, making him an entirely innocent victim.

So far, teenaged victim has not been publicly named.

There is also no description of the driver or suspect vehicle, other than a four-door sedan, with a broken side mirror and likely front-end damage.

The CHP is investigating the killing, since it took place on state property. Anyone with information is urged to call the their Southern Division Major Crimes Unit at 323/644-9550, or the Los Angeles Communication Center at 323/259-3200.

Let’s hope they find this murderous jerk soon, and get him off the roads.

Permanently.

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No surprise here.

It turns out that ripping out Toronto bike lanes like Ontario Premier Doug Ford — brother of the city’s late crack-smoking mayor — is demanding would actually make the city’s traffic worse, not better.

Meanwhile, a Mastadon user says the hundreds of bicyclists participating in a Toronto protest received a hero’s welcome from both pedestrians and drivers.

And a former Winnipeg city counselor and Canadian cabinet member called for halting new bike lanes, arguing that “Bike lanes have become more symbolic than functional, and symbolism is not enough to justify millions in spending.”

Never mind that bike lanes have repeatedly been shown to boost local businesses and property values while improving safety and livability for everyone.

Which should more than justify the relatively small amount to build new bike lanes, here, there or anywhere.

Thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up. 

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Applications are now open for community groups to apply for two programs run by the UC Berkeley Safe Transportation Research and Education Center (SafeTREC) designed to train people how to assess bicycle and pedestrian safety in their communities, and recommend how to improve it.

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Be on the lookout for a stolen trailer full of hot bike gear taken from Culver City’s Walk ‘n Rollers.

Not to mention the lowlife schmuck who made off with it.

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It’s now 341 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

Is anyone really surprised that the leader of an Irish political party says he gets more abuse “week in, week out” while riding his bicycle than he does as a politician?

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Local  

Streetsblog talks with sustainability advocate, LA County transportation deputy and newly elected Culver City Councilmember Bubba Fish, who restores the city’s narrow progressive majority; losing that majority two years ago resulted in conservative councilmembers ripping out the successful MOVE Culver City protected bike lanes.

Streets For All is encouraging people to become supporting members for just $12 a month, looking to reach 200 members by their member event next month.

Eastern Ave in El Sereno will get a major makeover this fall to bring better bike paths, safer sidewalks, more trees and traffic calming.

 

State

Streetsblog San Francisco examines Emeryville’s nearly completed sidewalk-level Horton Street bike lane.

Sebastopol is looking into the viability of building a multi-use path bisecting the city.

 

National

Now you, too, can build your own ebike out of PVC pipe.

According to the former head of the Federal Highway Administration, barrier-protected bike lanes are a “proven safety countermeasure” that has been shown to reduce crashes “an average of exactly 49 percent on four-lane, undivided collector and local roads” in an urban area, and they have reams of federally compiled data to back it up.

You can find a lot of things while riding your bike, but no one wants to discover human remains along a Phoenix area bike path.

Bike helmets — they’re not just for surviving Oklahoma tornadoes anymore.

New York Magazine considers the best holiday gifts for bicyclists, chosen by bicyclists.

A lifelong Jersey City, New Jersey resident  says a recent op-ed saying plans for a new bike lane are hated by locals relied on cherry-picking opinions while “ignoring both data and the realities of traffic safety.”

The good news is the Pennsylvania legislature didn’t reject a bill legalizing protected bike lanes, but the bad news is they didn’t pass it, either.

Congratulations to workers at DC’s Washington Area Bicyclist Association, who are now officially unionized.

If you’re riding your bike from Delaware to Key West, it only makes sense to honor the late Jimmy Buffet along the way.

 

International

Cycling Weekly asks why cars, trucks and SUVs keep getting bigger, questioning whether it will ever end. And they say modern bikes are so good, they take the worry out of riding.

Bicycling offers advice on how to safely do an Idaho Stop. But you’ll need a subscription to read the story, because this one doesn’t appear to be available anywhere else. 

Momentum considers the “world’s coolest and most unique” bicycling infrastructure innovations. None of which can be found in Los Angeles. Or the US, even.

A British Columbia judge denied bail to a man accused of trying to use a stolen dump truck to break into an ebike store, after he failed to bust through the security gates despite multiple attempts, just four months after he was arrested for using a forklift to break into a different ebike dealer.

Strange case from Cornwall, England, where a man in his 60s died crashing his bicycle into a parked car, just hours after going missing from a local hospital.

Bike lane opponents in Coventry, England are upset that trees are being cut down to make room for one, but only because they chose saving parking over saving trees.

A writer for the Guardian goes ebiking through Britain’s New Forest National Park.

That’s more like it. Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo called for banning SUVs from the city, warning that they could become weapons against other citizens. Even if the conservative London Telegraph takes great pains to point out that she’s a Socialist — capital S — which has nothing to do with banning SUVs 

A French soccer website criticizes Lionel Messi for his “overpriced bicycle scandal,” after the Argentine superstar introduced his own very high-end bicycle selling for more than $15,000.

New Zealand officials found a 78-year old man safe and well after he failed to return home from a mountain bike ride.

An Aussie program is teaching older women the joys of riding a bicycle. Thanks again to Megan Lynch.

 

Competitive Cycling

Costa Rican pro Andrey Amador called it a career at 38 years old, after he’s been unable to compete since a truck driver ran over his foot and bike while training in Spain last May.

Cycling Up To Date considers five “magical” cycling records Tadej Pogačar could set this year.

American cyclist Neilson Powless, the first Native American to compete in the Tour de France, wants to inspire more Indigenous Americans to get on their bikes.

 

Finally…

Why wait for officials to do something about distracted drivers, when you can just post your own traffic signs saying “Get off your damn phone.” When you’re under house arrest, maybe don’t show up to vote riding a bicycle.

And no, you don’t have to send a thank you note to the driver who gave your kid a new bike after crashing into him and destroying his old one.

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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

Not so much for safety as a shared responsibility, more or less on bike lanes, and just try surviving without one

Just 38 days until Los Angeles fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 
But sure, raise your hand if you’ve heard a single LA city leader so much as mention it. 

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He gets it.

A writer for Fast Company says the common refrain of “safety is a shared responsibility” — or “a two-way street” in the parlance of too many newspaper editors — misses the point, absolving those who are really responsible for this country’s inexcusably high rate of traffic deaths.

Innocuous though it may seem, the refrain encapsulates much of what’s wrong with road safety in the U.S., where crash death rates are at least double other rich countries, from Japan to Finland to Canada.

In reality, the duty to prevent collisions should fall on the road engineers, car companies, and public officials who create the system in which people drive, bike, or walk—and not on road users themselves. By lumping everyone together, the phrase blurs that distinction, allowing those who can do the most to save lives to dodge accountability.

It’s worth giving it a quick read, because there are a lot of people to blame for the rising death toll on our streets.

Starting with the people who build and market oversized and over-powered vehicles virtually designed to kill. Not to mention the engineers and politicians who build the roads they speed on.

But the actual victims, not so much.

Graphic from Bike Santa Clarita

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Today’s common theme is bike lanes, And more bike lanes.

Or fewer bike lanes, even, in a few cases.

Velo says bike lanes make the road safer for everyone, not just bicyclists, citing a new study showing that adding bike lanes to a busy intersection makes drivers slow down, whether going straight or turning right.

No surprise here, as San Diego’s notoriously anti-bike lane OB Rag picked up the anti-bike lane screed from the Washington Post we debunked yesterday. And trust me, you don’t want to read the comments. 

A Petaluma op-ed considers the health benefits of the city’s bike lanes, including encouraging people to bike instead of driving.

You’ve got to be kidding. Quebec’s anti-bike provincial government covers its bases by amending the bill allowing them to overrule local governments to rip out bike lanes, by absolving themselves of any liability for anyone killed or injured after one is removed.

Seriously? City officials in Bangkok ripped out a new bike lane just one day after it was installed, reopening the lane to motor vehicles and apologizing for the traffic “chaos” it caused. Never mind that drivers likely would have adjusted to the change if they gave them half a chance.

And heading back to Quebec, a tongue-in-cheek new game clarifies the risks to riders once the lanes are removed. I lasted a whopping 51 seconds before dying in a dooring; thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up. 

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The OC Wheelmen say it’s starting to look a lot like party time.

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Yes, that pretty much sums up the value of hi-viz.

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It’s now 338 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

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Local  

You’re invited to attend the official opening of the new Bouquet Canyon Trail in Saugus this Monday.

 

State

Calbike is hosting a Zoom meeting December 3rd to unveil their priorities to make California’s streets safer and more sustainable.

More bad news from the Victorville area, where a man riding a bicycle was critically injured by a hit-and-run driver in nearby Apple Valley Thursday night.

Ventura nonprofit Bikes 4 a Cause will offer a free class to teach kids to ride a bicycle tomorrow.

Bad news from Northern California, where a man was killed while either riding or walking his bicycle in Del Norte County.

 

National

Singletraks offers 13 gifts for the “badass” modern mountain biking women in your life.

If you bought your kid a Nerf Barrage Bike Helmet from Walmart, it’s been recalled because they don’t meet mandatory federal safety regulations and could result in a head injury. Never mind why the hell you’d put your kid in a Nerf helmet to begin with. 

That’s more like it. A 27-year old Las Vegas man will spend up to ten years behind bars — and at least four — after copping a plea to killing an ebike rider while speeding and driving under the influence with a suspended license. Although maybe someone should tell the TV station the victim probably had a name, too. 

A writer in my bike-friendly Colorado hometown says the site of the old Colorado State University Rams football stadium would make the perfect site for a bike park to serve kids and adults. I once saw the Rams kicker set the NCAA record for the longest field goal there — which lasted about half an hour until someone else at another college broke it. 

Des Moines, Iowa opened a new bike and pedestrian bridge over the Racoon River.

A Texas man will spend the next 42 months behind bars after pleading guilty to stealing six bikes worth more than $100,000 from Lance Armstrong’s storage locker; no word on whether Lance ever got them back. Although if it makes you feel better, one of the bikes was only worth 500 bucks.

Tragic news, as it turns out the Mississippi woman killed in a dispute over a bicycle that we mentioned yesterday was shot multiple times by her own 29-year old daughter, who now faces a murder charge along with another man.

 

International

Road.cc recommends budget-friendly gifts under the equivalent of $68 for the bicyclist in your life. Hint: You’re probably the bicyclist in your life. Just saying. 

Here’s another one for your bike bucket list, as Momentum offers a guide to biking in Reykjavik, Iceland. Better yet, you’re only 40 miles or so from the active volcano on the Reykjanes peninsula

That’s more like it. A British driver with a history of speeding got a well-deserved eight years behind bars for killing a 12-year old boy riding a bicycle, after recklessly weaving while speeding through traffic and roaring his engine.

I want to be like him when I grow up. A 90-year old Irishman — from Tipperary, no less — is keeping fit by riding his new ebike, after years riding a racing bike.

Aussie adventure cyclist Jimmy Ashby — named Australian Geographic’s Young Adventurer of the Year for 2019 — spent the last 11 months riding his bike from Asia to the Middle East to North America and home again. So what did you do this year?

 

Competitive Cycling

British road champion Pfeiffer Georgi still won’t watch video of her crash at the Tour de France Femmes, when she went over her handlebars in a mass crash and fractured her neck, but she says she’s ready to get off her sofa and back onto her bike — and hopefully make it back to the Tour next year.

Remco Evenepoel’s road to the 2025 Tour de France runs through an American wind tunnel.

 

Finally…

Your next bike could be both recycled and recyclable. You can never have enough lights on your bike — or a jersey that says you’re packing.

And if the cops can catch a violent bikejacker less than a day after installing bike path security cams, maybe they should have done it just a tad sooner.

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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

Washington Post meets windshield bias, break-in at Hollywood and Vine Bike Hub, and Metro wants their MOVE money back

Just 39 days until Los Angeles fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 
But sure, raise your hand if you’ve heard a single LA city leader so much as mention it. 

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Washington Post, meet windshield bias.

Marc Fisher, a columnist and associate editor for the paper, penned an essay purporting to tell “the truth about bike lanes,” which largely doesn’t.

Rather, he suggests that traffic calming and bike lanes are more about intentionally gumming up traffic to discourage people from driving, and encourage gentrification to change the ethnic and economic demographics of the city.

In other words, he tells us he doesn’t understand traffic safety and urban planning without telling us.

The District’s planners are intent on putting many of the city’s most important streets on what’s called a “road diet,” which sounds healthy and nutritious but is actually a recipe for traffic constipation and commuter headaches — and maybe a stealth mechanism for encouraging a wholesale shift in race and class in certain neighborhoods…

Across town, on South Dakota Avenue NE, the fight is ongoing, and, as The Post’s Rachel Weiner reported, this squabble reveals an essential truth about bike lanes as weapons of civic planning: They are often installed not to satisfy the barely measurable trickle of residents who pedal to work but mainly to make car traffic worse enough that people will be discouraged from driving.

He goes on to site the reasons given by city officials for DC’s traffic calming efforts, before rejecting them.

“Just as the big, wide lanes we have now induce speeding and reckless driving” Kapur tells me, so too would bike lanes induce slower driving — and maybe more bike riding.

Not so fast he says, citing federal statistics showing the percentage of residents who bike to work has dropped every year since reaching a peak of 5% in 2017, down to 3% — in 2022.

Never mind that the proportion of DC residents who work from home jumped from just over 7% in 2017 to more than 33% just five years later. So of course the percentage of bike commuters dropped, along with every other form of transportation, as more workers stayed home.

Then he makes a quick pivot to the racial makeup of bike riders, citing a Virginia Tech study showing 88% of bike riders are white.

But as he says, not so fast.

The study he cites dates back to 2008, and involves both the urban and suburban jurisdictions of the greater Washington, DC area, including Alexandria, Arlington County, and Fairfax County in Virginia; and Montgomery County and Prince George’s County in Maryland.

In other words, the largely Black and relatively small population of DC is conflated with the largely white, affluent and much larger populations of the suburbs. So even if a higher proportion of Black DC residents biked to work than in other areas, their numbers would be swamped by all the white suburban residents.

Never mind that the numbers he cites are more than a decade and a half out of date.

But taking the time to uncover more recent data might not support his premise that the whole reason to install bike lanes is to gum up drivers commutes and change the racial makeup of the city.

Nope.

No bias there.

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If you keep your bike — or anything else — at the Hollywood and Vine Bike Hub, you might want to check on it tout suite.

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It’s now 337 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

No bias here, either. A Marin newspaper says the trial part-time removal of the bike lane on the Richmond-San Raphael Bridge makes it clear that the bridge should see a car-only future, in which bike commuters should be happy to be carted across in a shuttle van, climate crisis be damned.

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Local  

The Complete Streets makeover of Fountain Avenue was the clear winner in the recent West Hollywood election, even if it wasn’t on the ballot. And even if opponents don’t think so.

Metro wants its money back for the MOVE Culver City protected bike lanes ripped out by the city’s recent conservative council majority, sending Culver City a bill for the full $435,000 grant.

 

State

A kindhearted California couple who lost their son to suicide drove across the county to give his bicycle to a young boy who lost his father the same way.

Irvine unveiled the city’s first physically separated, Class IV bikeway, a 1.25-mile route near the city’s Great Park.

Circulate San Diego offers an annual recap of the city’s bicycle and pedestrian OTS safety program.

 

National

Electrek shares ten things you really should know before buying an ebike.

Streetsblog explains everything you need to know about D-list reality TV star and new Transportation Secretary nominee Sean Duffy, amid fears he’ll take an axe to anything that doesn’t burn fossil fuels.

Seattle bicyclists can now use an app to report anything from bike lane obstructions and street sweeping needs to missing bike lane signs and road markings.

A novice New York bike rider shares the insights she gained after being talked into a 79-mile fundraising ride to fight breast cancer.

New York’s Central Park Conservancy calls for a major makeover of the park, with a rendering showing separate running and walking paths, along with a bike lane next to a shared traffic lane, presumably for faster riders.

Finishing our New York trifecta, the NYPD has released a photo of the pickup driver who killed a bike-riding woman as he fled from police, who were responding to a burglary call; a witness says the victim rang her bike bell to warn him, saving his life before sacrificing hers.

A woman in Jackson, Mississippi was shot and killed in a dispute over a stolen bicycle; two people now face charges. As we’ve said before, no bike is worth a human life. Just give it up and live to ride another day.

 

International

Clean Technica recommends improving your safety with “unique” bar-end rear vier mirrors, unless you’d rather have one you can attach to your glasses.

A British startup is installing app-controlled smart bike parking docks, which appear to be standard U-racks with a heavy-ass chain attached.

Amsterdam continues to raise the bar for everyone and everywhere else, crafting a new state-of-the-art main bicycling route along the Amstel River.

Italian bikemaker Colnago goes retro with a Columbus steel framed road bike to celebrate their 70th anniversary.

The government of Hong Kong has postponed a requirement for bike helmets until next year, saying they need more time to work out the details.

China Digital Times offers a brief first-person account of the massive Zhengzhou to Kaifeng nighttime dumpling ride.

 

Competitive Cycling

Columbian cyclist Nairo Quintana took advantage of the opportunity after receiving the country’s Order of Democracy Simon Bolivar to warn that the country’s athletes face massive budget cuts.

Cycling Up To Date examines how Denmark produces such talented cyclists, from Bjarne Riis to Jonas Vingegaard. Although that’s a question that might be better directed towards Slovenia these days.

 

Finally…

Now you, too, can carry your spare wheels in a bigass square backpack. If God is on your side, wouldn’t you actually finish the world championships?

And country star Dierks Bentley is one of us.

 

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Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

LAPD keeping us in the dark on hit-and-runs, update to 5-Star Safety Ratings, and Robin told Conan to “go ride a bike”

Just 40 days until LA fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 
Not that LA leaders actually care, or anything. 

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Monday evening I updated our report on the hit-and-run collision that took the life of bike rider Oscar Guardado in South LA last month, after the LAPD finally got around to asking for the public’s help.

Which is one reason I wasn’t able to post anything here yesterday.

Guardado was killed when he was struck by the driver of a black four-door sedan at Normandie Ave and W 23rd Street around 9:55 pm on October 27th; the driver fled the scene, apparently without stopping.

LAPD detectives urged any witnesses to the crash to come forward, after security video showed there were other people who could have seen the crash in the area at the time of the collision.

Anyone with information is urged to call LAPD Sgt. Garbiel Nily of the South Traffic Division at 323/421-2500, or call the South Traffic Division Watch Commander after business hours at 323/421-2577.

As always, there is a standing $50,000 reward for any fatal hit-and-run in the City of Los Angeles.

However, the city also has a hit-and-run alert system which was approved a decade ago to get the public’s assistance in the hours immediately after a driver flees a collision, when they are most likely to remember key details that could help the cops find a suspect.

It was based on the highly successful program used in Denver to track down hit-and-run drivers, and was quickly followed by a similar California program.

Yet to the best of my knowledge, the LAPD has never used either one, apparently preferring to wait until the trail has gone cold before asking for our assistance.

Which could explain their miserable success rate of identifying a suspect in just one in five hit-and-runs reported to the department, and resulting in charges in less than half of those.

Although that’s better than the eight percent success rate they claimed in 2018.

If we had an effective city government, our elected leaders would demand to know why so little effort apparently goes into solving a crime that affects so many people. And demand to know why the tool the created to get the public’s help in solving it continues to go unused.

Or why they can’t at least inform the public within a few days of a serious crash.

But they don’t.

And we don’t.

So we can continue to count on the LAPD letting us know about serious and sometimes fatal crashes, when and if they get around to it.

Because why change a system that clearly isn’t working for anyone.

Meanwhile, the crowdfunding page to help pay for Oscar Guardado’s funeral expenses has raised just $1,625 of the modest $12,500 goal.

So if you have any extra cash lying around that you don’t need, they could use the help.

Photo of Oscar Guardado from crowdfunding page.

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About damn time.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, aka NHTSA, has finally finalized changes to their 5-Star Safety Ratings program by incorporating new driver assistance tech, as well as measuring the degree of a vehicle’s pedestrian protection.

According to the NHTSA,

Notable changes to the program provided by this update include:

  • The addition of four advanced driver assistance technologies that will enhance crash-avoidance safety: pedestrian automatic emergency braking, lane keeping assist, blind spot warning and blind spot intervention.
  • Updated and strengthened testing procedures and performance criteria for advanced driver assistance technologies that are already included in NCAP, such as automatic emergency braking.
  • The addition of a crashworthiness pedestrian protection program to evaluate the ability of a vehicle’s front end to mitigate pedestrian injuries and fatalities in vehicle-to-pedestrian impacts.
  • Midterm and long-term roadmaps to accommodate future updates amid ongoing research and technological advancements in vehicle safety, including crash avoidance and crashworthiness improvements to protect bicyclists and motorcyclists and an updated rating system.

The protections for people outside the vehicle don’t go nearly as far as, or offer the rigid requirements of, the vehicle standards in the European Union.

But it’s a start.

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We already knew the late, great Robin Williams was one of us.

Now it turns out that after Conan O’Brien was fired from the Tonight Show when Jay Leno decided he wasn’t ready to step down after all, Williams called him out of the blue and told him to hit the road, too.

But in this case, the bike-riding comedian told Conan he had rented a Colnago for him at a Santa Monica bike shop, instructing them to paint it in “crazy” Irish colors. And told him to bike around the city to clear his head.

It must have worked, because Conan will host the Oscars next February, after hosting his own late-night show for 11 years.

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This is who we share the road with.

A 33-year old travel influencer faces 15 year to life for the crash that killed an 83-year old woman on deadly Fountain Ave in West Hollywood.

If he survives, that is.

Garrett Bruno suffered only minor injuries in the October 10th crash that killed Esther Abouab and seriously injured her husband, while allegedly speeding in his SUV.

But he broke his jaw falling off a scooter less than a week later. Then he allegedly fell off his scooter again days later on October 25th, this time suffering a fractured skull. And just two days before sheriff’s deputies raided his home in an attempt to arrest him, unaware that he was reportedly hospitalized in grave condition in a coma.

Assuming he recovers, prosecutors are expected to file felony counts of second-degree murder and reckless driving against him.

Let’s hope he’s not allowed to drive again. And has enough sense to stay off scooters going forward.

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BikeLA hosts its’ 3rd Annual LA Bike Fest Fundraiser Happy Hour this Saturday from noon to 3 pm at the Highland Park Brewery in, yes, Highland Park.

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Caltrans is hosting a meeting to discuss proposed changes to Foothill Blvd in La Verne.

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Good question.

https://twitter.com/HowTheWestWS/status/1858698580829368799

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It’s now 336 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

No bias here. Republican California State Senator Republican Kelly Seyarto complains, among many other things, that the policies of California’s Democratic leadership “prioritize curbing the construction of roads and highways in favor of bike lanes and high-speed rail projects.” Considering the cuts California’s Active Transportation Program took in the governor’s budget, before being restored by the legislature, they don’t seem to prioritize that, either. 

Residents of a London neighborhood got fed up with Lime bikes abandoned in a parking lot, and took an axel grinder to them.

London’s anti-bike Telegraph publishes a “dossier of collision data” involving “rogue cyclists” in the city’s parks. And illustrates it by manipulating photos of people bicycling safely and legally to make it look like they’re speeding.

A Northern Irish newspaper gets its Irish up over a nearly $3.3 million investment in a new bike lane, without noting that is the cost to rebuild the entire roadways.

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Local  

While Los Angeles does nothing, as usual, Glendale is moving ahead with plans for implementing the speed cam pilot program approved by the state earlier this year.

Streetsblog tours the Puente Hills Landfill that is intended to become the future “Griffith Park of the San Gabriel Valley” when it opens in 2027. Let’s just hope it turns out to be safer than the “Griffith Park of the Los Angeles Basin.”

They get it. A coalition of South Pasadena safe streets organizations complain about the city’s wide open, high speed streets, and call on local residents to support the vision for city streets presented by Toole Design Group.

 

State

It’s been a rough few days for Victorville bicyclists, including a bike rider who was hospitalized after being struck by a pickup driver yesterday.

No surprise here. After hitting a young man riding a bicycle last weekend, a Santa Barbara driver got out of his car and disappeared, while the passenger started to exchange information with a witness, before taking off in a dead run after being asked if the driver had been drinking. Thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up. 

A crowdfunding campaign for a 13-year old Bakersfield boy killed in a collision while riding his bike has raised nearly $9,000 of the $15,000 goal.

Sad news from San Carlos, where a Palo Alto woman was killed in a collision while riding her bike.

San Francisco presents the final design for moving the much-maligned Valencia Street centerline bike lane, which got the unanimous blessing of the city’s Municipal Transportation Agency’s board of directors.

 

National

Cycling Weekly says the fatality rate for bicycling is disproportionately high, but it beats the hell out of the health risks of letting your car do all the work.

US bikemaker Woom is recalling 2,500 children’s bikes that may be afflicted by damaged cranks, which could break during use, and have resulted in at least one injury.

A Seattle Redditor posts video of the city’s obstructed bike lanes.

Colorado’s governor calls for doubling the state’s rate of bicycling, walking and transit use by 2035. Let’s hope they do better than Los Angeles, which has missed nearly every date it has set for the last decade.

North Dakota’s governor celebrates a $1.5 million grant that will allow the state to bring the All Kids Bike program to 233 elementary schools, teaching the kids how to ride a bike safely.

Apparently bike polo is still a thing, as a Texas public radio station talks with a San Marcos bike polo player who says it’s his thing.

Indianapolis bike riders offer advice on how drivers can help keep them safe on the roads, reminding them that the person on the bicycle is “somebody’s mother, sister, brother, father.”

Sports Illustrated profiles Dartmouth College student Bond Almand, who shattered the Pan-American Highway Bike Race record for riding from Alaska to Argentina.

A Georgia Tech research engineer tracks the evolution of bike helmets, from plant rinds to high-tech materials.

 

International

The Guardian picks the best gifts for bicyclists, from a neck snood to geranium and orange bath oil. Even if you have to buy them for yourself.

Cycling Weekly celebrates the benefits and freedom of taking your time on your next ride.

Czech carmaker Škoda’s We Love Cycling website turns the usual “best cities for bicycling” routine on its head, listing the five European cities where you absolutely shouldn’t ride a bike, including Lisbon and Dubrovnik. But not including Venice, where it is literally impossible.

Momentum considers family friendly adventure cycling routes around the world, including America’s Great Allegheny Passage.

A new map tells you what intersections to avoid on your bicycle on your next trip to London.

No surprise here, as an 18-year old British man finds himself reluctant to get back on his bike after getting hit by drivers for the third time.

The student newspaper for Dublin’s Trinity College examines the “perilous history” of bicycling in the city.

Bicycling Dutch says “Good cycling infrastructure is where small mistakes do not have severe consequences.” They got that right. 

 

Competitive Cycling

Testimony at an official inquest reveals 24-year old New Zealand cyclist Olivia Podmore was bullied by her coaches in the days before her suicide, apparently in response to being left off the squad for the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games.

U-23 cyclist Tom Schellekens is walking away from his team’s road cycling squad to focus on mountain biking in Los Angeles in 2028.

 

Finally…

Forget ebikes, just plant more trees. If you’re riding your bike carrying meth and drug paraphernalia, with eight — count ’em, eight — active arrest warrants, maybe just don’t.

And nothing like finding a biohazard container or a llama in the bike lane — but that beats the hell out of a moving car on a bike path.

Or bigass Christmas tree.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

Cover your ass with uninsured motorist coverage, new Baldwin Park bike lanes, and dead bear bike framer to head HHS

Just 42 days until LA fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

Good advice from Oceanside bike injury attorney and BikinginLA sponsor Richard Duquette not to skimp on the uninsured motorist coverage on your auto insurance policy, which could protect you financially, if not physically, if you’re struck by a driver.

It’s a topic we’ve covered before.

Maybe someday insurance companies will figure out that maybe we’d like to be able to buy our own insurance policies, even if you don’t own a car.

Jackass photo from Pixabay, reminding you to, well, you get it. 

………

Yes, please.

Although I’m told this is actually in Baldwin Park, not Baldwin Hills. Just too many Baldwins out there.

And Streetsblog visits LA County’s new Vincent Community Bikeway, with includes stretches of “new creekside bike/walk paths, connected by on-street protected bike lanes.” If you consider car-tickler plastic bendy posts protection, that is. 

………

Bay Area bicyclists rode to protest a proposal to make the bike lane on the Richmond-San Raphael Bridge just part-time during non-rush hours. Because evidently, only drivers need to commute at regular work times. 

Thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up. 

………

It’s now 334 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

The families of Ontario traffic victims rallied to criticize provincial Premier Doug Ford’s anti-bike lane bill; it could adversely affect handicapped people, as well.

Hamilton city counselors reject the “war on cars” label, and tell Ford to butt out of the city’s business.

A new survey shows Canadians are all in favor of bicycling infrastructure — as long as it’s not in the roadway.

No bias here. Welsh drivers claim that narrowing a roadway to make room for a bike path is an “attack on your right to drive a car.” Because evidently, they’re entitled to every inch of the road. Or think they are, anyway. 

But sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.   

A writer for the Virginia Tech student newspaper correctly points out that both bicyclists and non-riders need to show better etiquette on the roads. But only the bad etiquette from drivers is likely to get someone killed. 

No bias here, either. The London Times calls out “rogue cyclists” who’ve knocked down children and the elderly in the city’s parks. Never mind that sometimes people step into the path of a bicycle without looking, or the overwhelming majority of people who ride safely. And just wait until they hear about all those “rogue” drivers out there.

A British mom criticizes a bike rider for “uttering the worst excuse” after crashing into her disabled son while riding on the sidewalk, saying he couldn’t stop in time. It may be valid to criticize the rider for riding too fast, or even being on the sidewalk in the first place. But somehow expecting him to know her kid had a blood disorder, or being able to stop instantly under any circumstance, is asking too much. 

………

Local  

The LAPD is looking for the suspect who fled on a bicycle after shooting and killing a man on Pacific Ave in San Pedro.

Streets For All is calling for anyone who lives, works or shops — or rides, for that matter — in Burbank to turn out tomorrow to support dedicated lines for the NoHo to Pasadena Bus Rapid Transit project through the city.

 

State

San Diego residents called for safer streets on the World Day of Remembrance for the victims of traffic violence.

An op-ed from a Petaluma small business owner and safe streets advocate says the city needs to build a bike-friendly future.

They get it, sort of. The Sacramento Bee writes that the city needs funding for safer streets fast, because they’re killing people at alarming rates. But then they hid their editorial behind a paywall, as if no one really needs to see it.

 

National

A coalition of organizations working to end car crash deaths and serious injuries in America penned an open letter calling on the incoming administration and Congress to unite to solve the country’s roadway crisis. I only wish I still had hope that might happen. 

Bicycling says Trump’s proposed tariffs could make your next bike much more expensive. Read it on AOL this time if the magazine blocks you. 

Life is cheap in Ohio, where a woman got a whole 60 days behind bars — or 59 with time served — for killing a 12-year old boy who was riding his bicycle, after her attorney got a blood alcohol test tossed showing she was over three times the legal limit. But at least her license was suspended for five years. Because as we all know, no one would ever consider driving on a suspended license, right?

Massachusetts bicyclists rallied at the state capital to demand an end to traffic violence.

The night after Trump won the White House and Republicans took Congress, a DC church erupted in anger — over proposed bike lanes, not the election.

This is why people keep dying on our streets. A Florida jury acquitted a 77-year old woman on hit-and-run charges after a bike-riding man was killed when she cut him off in a crosswalk, because her lawyer managed to convince them she didn’t know she’d hit anyone. Seriously, if you don’t know when you’ve even been in a crash, you shouldn’t be driving. And if you shouldn’t be driving in the first place, you should be held accountable for whatever happens if you do.

 

International

Cycling Weekly wades into the debate over whether or not you should ride your bike after dark. Because evidently, only people who drive need to go out at night. Or home, for that matter. 

They get it. Momentum says governments should start paying people to bike to work to confront traffic congestion, pollution and sedentary lifestyles, like some cities in Europe are doing.

A British radio host completed a 300-mile ride from Wales to Scotland on a Raleigh Chopper bike, raising the equivalent of over $9.4 million for children in need.

LeMonde says anti-bicyclist anger is rising in France. But you’ll have to subscribe if you want to read the whole thing. 

Life is cheap in Singapore, where a former actor was fined the equivalent of a whopping $2,230 for injuring a man riding a bicycle. But at least he was banned from driving for five years. And in Singapore, that might actually mean something. 

An Aussie driver considers why some bicyclists have a capacity to inflame drivers’ emotions — which is putting it mildly — when even riders who don’t move into single file aren’t that hard to pass.

 

Competitive Cycling

Somebody give that boy a sandwich, already.

 

Finally…

You can see a lot from your bike — like a rabbit-like rodent on the wrong damn continent. Even the safest streets aren’t safe when drivers aren’t.

And the guy nominated to head up the US Health Department is the same anti-bike lane schmuck who dumped a dead bear on a Central Park bike path to frame bike riders for its killing.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

World Day of Remembrance,Westwood Mobility Popup on Sunday; and bike-friendly November election wins

Just 45 days until LA fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

Sunday is the World Day of Remembrance for the victims of traffic violence.

So take a moment to remember those who have been sacrificed to the almighty motor vehicle gods, and those who drive them — including the 48 SoCal bike riders who have needlessly lost their lives this year.

Streets Are For Everyone, So Cal Families for Safe Streets, LA Walks, Bike LA and SAFE Families will hold memorials Sunday to remember the 746 people killed in collisions in Los Angeles County last year at Gloria Molina Grand Park in DTLA, at 9:30 am, 11 am, and 2:30 pm.

Other observances will be held in Corona and San Diego; see the top link in this section for details.

Photo by Tucă Bianca from Pexels.

………

Candidates endorsed by Streets For All helped lead to bike-friendly city council majorities in Santa Monica, West Hollywood and Culver City, as well as winning races in CD10  and CD14 in Los Angeles.

So maybe the new majority in Culver City can undo the ridiculous removal of the highly successful MOVE Culver City protected bike lanes.

We can hope, right?

Meanwhile, Calbike claims victory for seven of the nine bike-friendly candidates they endorsed in this month’s election, including new Burbank Assemblymember Nick Schultz, and new Los Angeles Assemblymembers Jessica Caloza and Sade Elhawary.

And famed Emeryville “Bike Mayor” and cargo bike pilot John Bauters is now officially an Alameda County District Supervisor.

………

Streets For All is hosting a mobility popup in Westwood this Sunday, in conjunction with AARP.

And Bike LA — the former Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition — will host their annual Bike Fest Happy Hour a week from tomorrow.

………

It’s now 331 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

Meanwhile, San Francisco’s ebike rebate pilot program boosted the net earnings of delivery workers compared to using a car, while generating virtually no greenhouse gas emissions. Thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up. 

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

Cycling Weekly offers tips on how to rebut the usual anti-bike rants.

It will cost at least $48 million to remove Toronto bike lanes targeted by bike-unfriendly Ontario Premier Doug Ford.

Once again, someone has boobytrapped a UK mountain bike trail, stringing electric wire fencing at neck level across the trail, which could shock or strangle, if not decapitate, an unsuspecting victim. And which should be prosecuted appropriately once they find the asshole.

A road raging Norwegian driver went on a rampage against a bike-riding man, first blocking the bike lane with his van, then drop kicking him off his bicycle before assaulting both bike and rider.

………

Local  

Santa Monica’s 17th Street and Michigan Ave Safe Streets project was named Transportation Project of the Year by the Southern California Chapter of the American Public Works Association (APWA).

 

State

Coronado considers banning ebikes from sidewalks.

Livability says the all-year sunshine, mild high desert climate, and open roads and mountain bike trails make San Bernardino County’s Victor Valley a bicycling paradise.

Heartbreaking news from Bakersfield, where a 13-year old boy was killed by a driver while riding his bicycle home from school.

Sonoma is looking for feedback on the city’s Active Transportation Plan.

Sad news from Sacramento, where a man in his 40s was killed by a motorist when he allegedly swerved his bike in front of the driver’s SUV.

Sacramento is considering a plan to limit parking spaces in new buildings, while increasing bike parking; Los Angeles passed a similar measure over a decade ago.

 

National

Consumer Affairs ranks the worst states per capita for bike thefts. Shockingly, California isn’t on the brief list.

About damn time. GM is making technology to alert drivers to the presence of bicyclists standard equipment on all its brands, beginning with the 2025 model year.

Bike Magazine highlights the country’s six best winter mountain biking destinations; the list includes Southern California from Santa Barbara to Santa Monica. Although word has it that Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties ain’t bad, either.

Five years after a Minneapolis street safety advocate was killed while riding his bicycle, his father continues to carry on his son’s work.

Tragic news from Wisconsin, where five people were killed when their car went off the road and struck a tree; all five were active in the annual Ride to Cure Diabetes, a fundraising ride to fight type 1 diabetes.

Life is cheap in Connecticut, where a 72-year old woman walked without a single day behind bars for killing a 47-year old woman riding a bicycle while “fiddling” with her steering wheel, and the two “just seemed to merge together.” Yeah, that’s one way to describe it.

An Atlantic City writer says he knew an ebike was the best investment he ever made the moment he sat in the saddle.

 

International

Momentum highlights the seven lightest ebikes for easy urban riding, and lists the top ten reasons to bike to work in the winter. Most of which don’t apply here in sunny SoCal.

Life is cheap in Ontario, Canada, where a driver walked without a single day behind bars after he was sentenced to home vacation detention for the hit-and-run death of a 54-year old man, despite leaving his bike-riding victim to die alone in a ditch.

British bicyclists are warned not to ignore pain or weakness in your hands, which could result in a serious condition known as cyclist’s palsy. The same advice holds on this side of the Atlantic. 

A 62-year old father and noted criminal defense attorney died in a solo fall during a Belfast, Northern Ireland sportive when he struck a badly worn speed bump.

No surprise here, as a “groundbreaking” new German study shows bicyclists exhibit a greater commitment to the common good than their motoring counterparts.

More proof bikes make the best emergency vehicles, as bicycles prove critical in the wake of extreme flooding in Spain’s Valencia region. Thanks again to Megan Lynch. 

 

Competitive Cycling

Cyclist ranks the top 50 cyclists of this decade; Sepp Kuss is the top rated American at number ten.

Sad news from Germany, where six-time world track cycling champ Michael Hubner passed away in a Saxony hospital; he was 65.

French pro cyclist Célia Le Mouel was lucky to escape with minor injuries when a driver turned across her path without looking; her bike was not so lucky.

Three-time Tour de France champ and one-time shotgun blast survivor Greg LeMond tops Cycling Up To Date’s ranking of the all-time best North And South American cyclists.

Carbon monoxide could be the new doping.

 

Finally…

If you’re going to steal a $6500 ebike, maybe don’t leave your old bike behind as evidence. It’s one thing to carry a keyboard on your bicycle, it’s another when your entire bicycle is a piano.

And of course Hitch was one of us.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

San Diego traffic deaths climb 10 years after Vision Zero, rigid bollards pose risk to bikes, and who we share the road with

Just 47 days until LA fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 

Meanwhile, San Diego’s Vision Zero program is working about as well as most, including here in Los Angeles, as a new report says pedestrian and bicycling deaths have continued to climb in the ten years since the program was adopted.

The difference is that San Diego actually took major steps to improve safety, building new bike lanes and pedestrian improvements throughout the city. Although it’s arguably — and demonstrably — not enough.

But whether cities can ever do enough to compensate for bigger, faster vehicles and drivers distracted by smartphones and dashboard video screens is highly debatable.

………

A new German study confirmed the complaints of some San Diego bicyclists who’ve argued that rigid bike lane bollards pose a high risk for bicyclists, and can result in serious injuries to riders who hit them.

The authors conducted an experiment to test the risks to riders.

To assess the risk posed to cyclists by rigid bollards, DEKRA conducted two identical collision tests at its Crash Test Center in Neumünster, Germany, with a three-wheeled e-cargo bike driven at a speed of 25 km/h (about 15-16 mph), one against a flexible post and the other against a rigid one.

“In the test against the rigid post, there was a strong deceleration [slowing down] that threw the dummy from the saddle towards the handlebars. The bollard buckled and then acted as a ramp. The rear of the bike was lifted up, throwing the dummy off and causing the bike to tip over.”

“In a real-life situation, the person riding the bike would have suffered serious injuries,” Egelhaaf said.

On the other hand, flexible plastic bollards — like the car-tickler bendie posts preferred by LADOT — allowed riders to simply roll over them, with little or no risk of serious injuries.

But flexible bollards also do nothing to keep inattentive or uncaring drivers out of the bike lanes, and are often flattened within weeks, if not days, of their installation.

So the question becomes whether the risk of falls outweighs the risk posed by motorists and their big, dangerous machines.

I don’t know how to answer that.

The only way to get a actual answer would be to try a real world test on comparable roadways, and measure the rate of injuries on both after six months and a year.

And to the best of my knowledge, no one has done that. Or plans to.

………

This is who we share the road with.

A Santa Monica collision resulted in unexpected tragedy after a pickup driver collided with a motorcyclist on the 1400 block of Cloverfield Blvd, near the Specialized bike shop at Cloverfield and Santa Monica.

The motorcyclist only suffered minor injuries. But as he walked back to the truck to talk with the driver, he heard a shot ring out as the driver pulled out a gun and committed suicide, for reasons known only to himself.

………

This is who we share the road with, part two

A cop found a Lubbock, Texas man dead from complications of diabetes, which apparently resulted from injuries he suffered in an earlier road rage crash.

Witnesses said a driver seemed to intentionally crash into the victim’s motorcycle, after the motorbike rider waved a gun as the two men argued moments before the crash.

The driver claimed he accidentally hit the motorcycle while attempting to flee from the gunman — then he did flee immediately after the crash, turning a road rage incident into a fatal hit-and-run.

Or maybe even a homicide.

………

No bias here.

A panel of sadly misinformed Aussie broadcasters called for banning all bicyclists from the roads, especially the ones who “wear Lycra and have large guts,” while calling a three-wheeled recumbent bike a child’s toy tricycle.

All because video showed a driver correctly slow down behind the recumbent rider to wait for a safe opportunity to pass, before a truck driver slammed on his brakes to avoid running up the driver’s ass, and nearly hit an oncoming car headed in the other direction.

And somehow, they managed to conclude this was all the bike rider’s fault.

………

Drivers often act like we’re invisible.

Sometimes, it may actually be true.

………

Maybe Santa will bring me the new Tern do-it-all e-cargo bike for Christmas.

It could happen, right?

………

It’s now 329 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

No bias here, either. A Boston bike commuter says the city’s new bike lanes are a metaphor for the Democratic Party, since they were built to appease a “small, highly vocal minority,” a “depressing number” of whom consider the resulting traffic congestion a benefit, not a trade-off. Tell us you don’t understand traffic calming without saying it. 

If you’re going to hate on bicycles, might as well do it poetically, as a British letter writer pens an ode to the local city council’s “absurd” and “crazy” “cycle crusade.”

Now we’re being attacked by elderly Florida dog walkers and British people on e-scooters.

But sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.   

A Long Beach bike rider learned the hard way that when you’re carrying a bag of meth on your bike, don’t ride salmon. And don’t lie to the cops about having a gun, for chrissakes. 

Police in Brighton, England are investigating after a teenaged ebike rider crashed into a 75-year old woman, who had to be hospitalized.

………

Local  

Lucky us. Even more bicyclists get to participate in Waymo’s beta test, willingly or not, as the autonomous cab company expands into more Los Angeles neighborhoods, and opens up to all users.

WorldTour cyclist Neilson Powless and US crit champ Coryn Labecki led a 25-mile bike ride through the streets of Pasadena, before returning to a new private school to help the students build bicycles for underprivileged youth.

They get it. A Pasadena study session will consider how to revitalize North Lake Ave and turn it into a Complete Street to make it more inviting to bike riders and pedestrians, as it currently “suffers from excessive space allocated to cars.”

Manhattan Beach students will now be required to display a sticker saying they’ve taken an approved ebike safety course if they want to park them on campus.

Streetsblog hosts an open thread on Saturday’s relatively sparsely attended Beach Streets open streets event in North Long Beach, including Joe Linton’s always great photos.

 

State

Costa Mesa will host Micromobility America, a trade show for ebike and e-scooter makers, and others in the micromobility industry, this Thursday and Friday.

The Guardian examines the backlash to the closing of San Francisco’s Great Highway, as if it hadn’t just been approved by a majority of the city’s voters.

Sad news from Sacramento, where a 32-year old woman was killed when she was stuck by a driver while trying to ride across the street; naturally, the CHP blamed the victim for riding directly into the car’s path, without mentioning whether the driver may have been speeding or gone through a traffic signal.

 

National

Momentum writes in praise of community bike co-ops.

Bicycling considers how to say goodbye to the rider you used to be. A lesson I’ve struggled to learn myself. Unfortunately, this one doesn’t seem to be available anywhere else, so you’re on your own if the magazine blocks you.

National Geographic — yes, it’s still a thing — picks the best ebikes to “make cycling adventures a breeze,” while the National Council on Aging selects the best ebikes for old farts older Americans.

Bike Portland says last week’s election bodes well for bicycling in the city.

Colorado county commissioners nixed a hotly debated proposal for a mountain bike park, although the decision left developers demoralized.

NBA star Klay Thompson is one of us, riding his bike to relax between games after signing with the Dallas Mavericks.

A YouTuber rides the rough streets of Dallas to confirm whether it’s really the country’s most unbikeable city.

That’s more like it. An Illinois driver faces up to 61 years in prison for the drugged-driving crash that killed a man riding a bicycle, after he was convicted on four counts of aggravated DUI causing death and one count of reckless homicide.

A Vermont police officer was placed on administrative leave after killing a 38-year old man who was pulling a bike trailer behind his bicycle; officials unofficially exonerated the driver of the police cruiser by insisting it was rainy and dark, and the street was wet. Which is usually what happens when it rains.

Kindhearted McDonalds coworkers bought a new bicycle for a Cambridge, Massachusetts man after his bike was stolen.

New York completed the final phase of a Vision Zero makeover of the city’s former “Boulevard of Death,” which has already resulted in a dramatic reduction in deaths and serious injuries for all road users, while increasing bike use up to 450%.

Prosecutors in New Jersey are headed to the grand jury to seek a formal indictment of 43-year old Sean Higgins, accused in the drunken, high-speed crash that killed the hockey playing Gaudreau brothers as they rode their bikes on the shoulder of a New Jersey highway the night before their sister’s wedding.

Once again, someone riding a bicycle fell off a Florida drawbridge, when a 72-year old man fell after holding on for dear life after the bridge opened as he was riding across; fortunately, the victim’s injuries weren’t life threatening.

 

International

Canadian Cycling Magazine looks at city bicycling rules that need to be changed.

The BBC takes a look at bike riders who are taking things into their own hands, and tracking down their own stolen bicycles when the cops won’t. Speaking of which, Amazon has Air Tags on sale for just $19, or $70 for four

Life is cheap in Wales, where an 84-year old driver walked without a single day behind bars for killing a bike rider after claiming he just couldn’t see the victim, he was apparently spared jail time by virtue of being old. And once again raising the question of how old is too old to drive, if you can’t even see a grown man on a bicycle. 

An English police department is employing “scarecrow” bikes to frighten off bike thieves.

A British doctor suggests wearing a hot and slightly cumbersome face mask that may take some getting used to when you ride a bike on city streets.

Add riding a bike through the streets of Istanbul to your bicycle bucket list. Singing “Istanbul (not Constantinople)” while you ride is optional.

An American experiences “dirt, sweat and philosophical enlightenment” while gravel biking across Morocco.

Streetsblog considers what the US can learn from Africa’s bike mayor, asking what we can “learn from developing countries where car dependency hasn’t yet taken root.”

The New York Times looks at the thinking behind the massive five-hour bike ride that brought tens of thousands of Chinese people out on a search for dumplings, which became so popular the government shut it down. Cycling Weekly says with enough belief, we could all have our own viral Chinese dumpling ride.

Cycling Up To Date examines the ten biggest scandals in cycling history, culminating with our old doper buddy Lance.

 

Competitive Cycling

Cyclist looks back to Connie Carpenter’s — now Connie Carpenter-Phinney — win in the first women’s Olympic road cycling race at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, 40 years before the next American woman would take gold at this year’s Paris Olympics.

 

Finally…

Now you can crash your bike without ever leaving your living room. Even ungulates are breaking into bike shops these days.

And you really can carry a sofa on a bicycle. Or what looks like a love seat, anyway.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

Rancho Palos Verdes tries to ban ebikes, ebike looting follows Mountain Fire, and protected bike lanes south of the border

Just 49 days until LA fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

Happy Veterans Day to everyone who has served our country at home and abroad!

Get out for a good ride today to celebrate. And thank you.

Photo from Lime Micromobility.

………

Rancho Palos Verdes extends its usual unwelcome mat for bicyclists to e-bike riders, with new restrictions and fines to make you feel as unwanted as possible.

Of course, the Daily Breeze feels compelled to hide the story behind their paywall for subscribers only, so they evidently don’t want you to know about it.

However, this excerpt from the article suggests that they intend to ban ebikes entirely from city streets and sidewalks; the last part is legal, the first not so much.

Expanded e-bike restrictions

The city council recently expanded the ordinance to ban e-bikes on city streets and sidewalks, while allowing them on bicycle paths.

California state law allows bicycles on any street where cars are allowed, and ebikes are allowed under state law. So unless they’re planning to ban cars from city streets, they can’t ban ebikes, either.

But it could mean going to court to fight a ticket and convince a judge if you want to challenge it.

Thanks to Jim Lyle for the heads-up.

………

A worker on a Camarillo landscaping crew was arrested for looting an ebike Friday in the wake of the Mountain Fire.

After a homeowner parked his ebike in his driveway to check on his property, he returned to find the bike missing. He confronted a landscaping crew working in the area, and one of the men admitted to taking the bike, and gave it back to him.

The homeowner reported the incident to the police the next day, resulting in Ramon Avila Pacheco being booked on suspicion of looting in an evacuation order area.

Apparently, returning the ebike had no effect on the charge.

………

Streets For All founder Michael Schneider visits Mexico City, and discovers what Los Angeles could do with a little more political will.

Okay, a lot more.

………

MSNBC political commentator Chris Hayes is one of us, too. Thanks to Glenn with 2 Ns for the heads-up. 

Best way to commute before a big night.

Chris Hayes (@chrislhayes.bsky.social) 2024-11-05T22:24:25.118Z

………

It’s now 327 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

Seriously? The Marin County Supervisors are backing what the local newspaper calls a “bike-lane experiment,” which amounts to ripping out the bike lane on the Richmond-San Rafael bridge four days a week, on a trial basis. Although it’s questionable whether they could do it without a CEQA review on anything but a trial basis. 

That’s more like it. Thousands of people on bicycles jammed the streets to protest the removal of Toronto bike lanes, which were ordered taken out by the anti-bike provincial government. Maybe someday, we’ll be able to get a turnout like that here in Los Angeles. Click through if the video below appears truncated on your screen, like it is on mine.

Thousands turn out for protest to save bike lanes
byu/ICanGetLoudTooWTF intoronto

………

Local  

Streetsblog looks at new bike lanes and safety improvements around the city, stretching from DTLA to Leimert Park and the San Fernando Valley.

Metro Bike wants to know what you think; complete the survey and you could win a raffle prize.

An op-ed writer in the Los Angeles Times says he thought he had his bike commute down, until a bike-riding German man pointed out the obvious flaw in his route, which needlessly bypassed the beachfront bike path.

Sally Struthers is one of us, as the 77-year old former All in the Family star went for a casual bike ride in Los Angeles last week; a London paper uncharitably calls her “unrecognizable,” yet somehow the paparazzi managed to spot her.

 

State

Calbike says budget cuts have left California’s Active Transportation Program in dire straits, leaving just $100 million on hand, enough to fund just 4% of the $2.5 billion in requests.

Just days after a Victorville man was killed by a driver while riding his bike, another person riding a bicycle was critically injured by a pickup driver Friday evening; unfortunately, there’s no information about the victim at this time.

Good news from the Bay Area, where Prop K is leading with 54% of the vote, although it’s still too early to call; the ballot measure would permanently close San Francisco’s Upper Great Highway to motor vehicles and turn it into a linear park, bikeway and walkway.

 

National

No surprise here, as a new buffered bike lane in Bellingham, Washington is popular with bicyclists, and hated by motorists; ridership increased a third, while motor vehicle use on the street dropped by 14%. Which sounds like a win-win to me. 

Tragic news from Utah, where a county employee was killed when he rode his ebike off the side of the road during the ceremonial opening of a paved bike trail.

Former President Bush — that’s W, not his late dad — held his annual mountain bike ride for veterans on his sprawling Texas ranch.

 

International

Momentum offers the complete guide to cargo bikes, calling them the next big thing.

Momentum also highlights eight of the leading bike advocacy groups on both sides of the border; the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition and Santa Barbara’s Bici Centro make the cut, but none of the Los Angeles-based organizations did.

More proof that bicycles make the best emergency vehicles, as two men share a bike to get through floodwaters left behind by Hurricane Rafael in western Cuba.

Bike-friendly Canadian cities to consider if you’re already packing your bags to leave the US after last week’s election.

A London writer said she’s swearing off the Tube, aka the city’s subway system, after ebiking to work for a month, and pledges to never go back.

A golfer took an epic 47-day, 1,700-mile bike ride around Ireland to play golf and raise the equivalent of nearly $8,000 for a cancer charity.

Dutch ebike maker Stella is just the latest casualty in the bike industry.

Cycling Weekly explores how a bike trail along the former border between East and West Germany helped rewrite the history of the Berlin Wall.

A South African bicycle mayor is evangelizing bike riders in a Cape Town township, and throughout the city.

Hong Kong discovers that cracking down on illegal ebikes could spark a crisis for the city’s food delivery services.

Speaking of stories hidden behind paywalls, Kaifeng, China learned to be careful what they wish for when they encouraged night-time bike riding, and the streets became gridlocked with bicycles. Seriously, if the photo is legit, we’re talking wall-to-wall bikes. 

 

Competitive Cycling

Record-holding sprinter Mark Cavendish called it a career with a win in Singapore’s Tour de France Criterium; Cav raced wearing bib number 35, the record-setting number of Tour de France stage wins he set this year.

 

Finally…

No, fleeing police on a bicycle is not “driving away.” Your next ebike could have a sidecar.

And it could be a throwback to the original bicycles made by the Dodge brothers, before they got into the car biz.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

California rated 2nd safest state for bicyclists, Louisiana worst; and Complete Streets help boost Metro boardings

Just 53 days left until Los Angeles fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 

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Shockingly, California was rated as the second-safest state to ride a bike in, behind only Massachusetts.

That’s despite having the country’s second-highest number of bicycling deaths, after Florida. But as Sports Illustrated notes, we also have the nation’s largest population, and the most drivers.

At the other end of the scale, Louisiana ranked as the most dangerous state for bicyclists, followed by Florida, Arizona and Mississippi.

So maybe you might want to route that dream ride across the US a tad further north, just to be safe

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Streetsblog says ambitious Complete Streets projects along Reseda and Ventura Blvds have helped Metro reach over 1 million daily bus and train boardings.

However, the picture is more complicated for the 217 bus line on La Cienega Ave, and Hollywood and Los Feliz Blvds, where the quick-build Hollywood Blvd bike lane amounts to just two miles of the expanded 15.5-mile route.

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It’s now 323 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

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The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

Police in Ann Arbor, Michigan are investigating a driver who allegedly responded to getting yelled at for nearly hitting a bicyclist by pointing a gun at the bike rider and threatening him, but they insist it was just an isolated incident and there’s no threat to the public. Although someone who threatens random people with a gun over minor traffic incidents seems like kind of a big public threat to me. But what the hell do I know?

But sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.   

A Columbian extreme cyclist and bicycling influencer was killed, along with a 13-year old girl riding on the back of his bike, when he crashed his brakeless gravity bike head-on into motorcyclist while trying to pass a car on the wrong side of the roadway. Thanks to Megan Lynch for the heads-up.

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Local  

The annual cleanup of Ballona Creek, home to the popular Ballona Creek bike path, will take place tomorrow (scroll down).

Streets For All is joining AARP for a Mobility popup in Westwood a week from Sunday.

 

State

Calbike continues its call for safer vehicles, starting with side guards for large trucks.

A Sacramento TV station examines how the city is using bicycle infrastructure to create safer streets for everyone.

Burglars have hit a Sacramento-area bike shop three times in just ten days, making off with around 100 ebikes worth $120,000.

The Bay Area bucked national trends by electing several safe streets advocates, including Emeryville’s “Bicycle Mayor” John Bauters, who is on the verge of moving on to the Alameda County Board of Supervisors.

 

National

NBC News profiles a Chinese man making his way across the US by bicycle to demonstrate the heart of humanity.

A fraternity at the University of Colorado is riding a stationary bike for nearly six days straight to raise $100,000 to protect bicyclists and pedestrians from distracted drivers.

A Denver bicyclist created a new interactive map showing just how far you can get in the city by bicycle in 15 minutes, to demonstrate the practicality of the 15-minute city.

Bike riders say the nation’s oldest bike path, Brooklyn’s 1894 Ocean Parkway Greenway, is in desperate need of a facelift.

The Bicycle Coalition of Greater Philadelphia reminds us that this year’s World Day of Remembrance for the victims of traffic violence will take place on Sunday, November 17th.

 

International

Momentum considers 12 cities with “drop dead gorgeous” waterfront bikeways. San Diego’s Mission Bay makes the list, but evidently LA County’s beachfront Marvin Braude trail just ain’t pretty enough.

The CBC looks at how Montreal became a bicycle-centric city.

Shockingly, the British woman sentenced to over six years for the drug-fueled hit-and-run death of a bike riding man was five times over the legal limit for cocaine. No, what’s shocking is that Britain even has a legal limit for coke.

Smithsonian examines how the infamous Berlin Wall became a 100-mile long bike and pedestrian trail along the former border between the erstwhile East and West Germanys.

Evidently, there’s something funny about watching Aussie cops fall off their bikes riding up a steep, grassy hill.

 

Competitive Cycling

France’s Vélo d’Or, aka Golden Bicycle, will honor fallen Swiss cyclist Gino Mäder with a new award in his name for athletes supporting charitable or societal causes; Mäder was killed in a high speed crash while descending at last year’s Tour de Suisse.

Cyclist ranks the top 50 women’s road cyclists of the 2020s; you know it’s a tough list when the legendary Marianne Vos only comes in at number 6.

Cycling Up To Date ranks the top five male Belgian cyclists of this century; again, it’s a tough list when Remco Evenepoel can only hit number 3.

 

Finally…

Your next bike helmet could call for help if you actually put it to use. Your next cargo ebike could be a funky reverse tricycle.

And when you’re riding on Friar Truck Road with meth on your bike, put some damn lights and reflectors on it.

The bike, I mean, not the road. Or the meth.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin

Local news better than national for active transportation; and $1 billion LA River gap could be closed in our lifetimes, maybe

Just 54 days left until Los Angeles fails to meet its Vision Zero pledge to eliminate traffic deaths by 2025. 

………

I hope you’ll forgive yesterday’s unexcused absence. 

After writing about the man killed riding his bicycle in Victorville, I just wasn’t in a good space, mentally or emotionally.

And I’m still not. 

To be honest, this week’s election feels like a repudiation of everything I have believed and work for my entire life. While I understand you may think differently, that’s just where I am right now, until I get a chance to work through it. 

Which could take a little time. 

Photo by Element5 Digital from Pexels.

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One reason for my disappointment is that the election of Donald Trump and a GOP majority in the Senate does not bode well for active transportation, which has frequently been targeted for cuts by Republicans.

But as bad as the national news is for some of us, Streets For All founder Michael Schneider says the news locally was much better.

I’m also pleased to report that former Assembly Transportation Chair Laura Friedman will be my new representative in Congress, replacing newly elected California Senator Adam Schiff.

Although Schiff was named as one of those “enemies within” that Trump has promised to go after, so things could get rocky going forward.

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Don’t plan on riding the full LA River bike path anytime soon.

Closing the eight-mile long gap through DTLA is now expected to cost a hefty $1 billion, with an anticipated completion date of sometime in your lifetime.

Or maybe the next.

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The Partnership For Active Travel and Health released an open letter calling on governments around the world to include walking and biking in their next round of climate commitments.

And they invite you to sign on.

The Partnership for Active Travel and Health (PATH) calls on national governments to commit to walking and cycling in the next round of Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) to reach climate goals and improve people’s health and lives.

Enabling more people to walk and cycle safely and to access public transport by foot and by bicycle can help cut transport emissions in half by 2030 and is a fast-track way to achieve progress on urgent climate goals and the Paris Agreement. Yet PATH’s groundbreaking research shows that walking and cycling are significantly undervalued in countries’ NDCs. Despite two-thirds of nations having active travel policies in place, there remains a pressing need for increased ambition, action, and investment in their climate commitments to fully unlock the benefits of walking and cycling.

PATH has launched a new set of knowledge tools and guidance to support national policymakers to compare and benchmark existing policies, build capacity, and adopt walking and cycling as part of their country’s climate commitments.

  • The PATH’s Active Travel NDC Template offers a step-by-step guide with 20 actions to create effective policies, including interventions to create safe and accessible places to walk and cycle, public campaigns to shift mobility habits and embed walking and cycling into policy processes.
  • The PATH Dashboard visualises data from PATH’s 2023 report National Policies for Walking and Cycling in all 197 UNFCCC countries. It offers an overview of the progress made by countries in integrating walking and cycling strategies into their policy frameworks and NDCs. It also facilitates direct comparisons between countries and pinpoints areas requiring additional investment and ambition.
  • The PATH Walking and Cycling Regional Fact Sheets feature a comprehensive set of infographics analysing NDCs and walking and cycling policies across the six WHO- defined regions, detailing their objectives, actions, investments, and evaluations.

We urge countries to take full advantage of these tools to build walking and cycling into their climate commitments through the next round of NDCs submissions between November 2024 to February 2025, ahead of COP30 in Brazil.

PATH and its over 400 supporters stand ready to support national governments in this process.

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Apparently, ‘cross ain’t as new as we thought.

 

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It’s now 322 days since the California ebike incentive program’s latest failure to launch, which was promised no later than fall 2023. And a full 41 months since it was approved by the legislature and signed into law — and counting.

………

The war on cars may be a myth, but the war on bikes just keeps on going.   

An English writer says he set a personal best on a recent gravel ride — despite getting punched by a motorbike rider — but says the real lesson is why aggression shouldn’t be countered.

But sometimes, it’s the people on two wheels behaving badly.   

A Washington woman has filed a $10 million lawsuit against a bike rider who collided with her while doing the trail’s 15 mph speed limit.

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Local  

No news is good news, right?

 

State

Calbike explains how to fight the ebike bikelash, while Kendra Ramsey explains why she’s a bike advocate. I could have answered that question last week; now I’m not so sure. 

Santa Barbara reached an agreement to build a 4,000-foot bike lane to complete a missing link in the city’s bike network; the plan will trade land for an easement, while sparing over half the trees originally planned for removal.

Santa Cruz shares the county’s best bike trails, for your next trip up at that way.

Seriously, who hasn’t gone bike surfing down a steep San Francisco street? Besides me, I mean. 

 

National

Bicycling says the jury is still out on whether biking will affect your sperm count. But they apparently don’t want you to know about it, since this one’s not available elsewhere if the magazine blocks you.

Momentum explains what makes a great bicycling city, while an unrelated slideshow rates the country’s best bike cities, with Portland predictably #1, followed by Washington DC and Philadelphia; San Diego rates 12th, while Los Angeles comes in at a very respectable 17th. Which is how you know it’s bs.

Next City says new research shows bike lanes save lives by slowing drivers at intersections.

An ambulance took an injured 71-year old Oregon man to the hospital — after the driver right-hooked him — then stuck him with an $1,862 bill for the ride; now he’s suing them for a cool million bucks.

More proof Americans want safer streets, as Seattle is on the verge of approving a transportation levy to provide nearly a half-billion dollars for Vision Zero, bike lanes and pedestrian improvements, by the same two-thirds margin that LA’s Measure HLA passed with.

I want to be like her when I grow up. An 80-year old Massachusetts woman says she’s not ready to give up bicycling 80 miles a week, despite her doctor’s advice following a fall.

Influencer Matt Choi has been banned for life from the New York Marathon, after finishing the course in under three hours while flanked by two riders on ebikes recording his run; they were accused of blocking other people competing in the race.

 

International

Bike Magazine lists the top ten North American cities for mountain biking.

A London writer goes from budding bike theft reporter to tracking down his own stolen bike, thanks to an Air Tag.

An editor for Cycling Weekly says banning bicycles from city centers, like Birmingham, England is doing, won’t stop illegal ebike use, but it will make it harder for everyone else.

Finally a reasonable sentence from the UK, where a stoned hit-and-run driver who killed a 59-year old man riding a bicycle was sentenced to a well-deserved six years and eight months behind bars.

Britain’s National Health Service will review its guidelines for prostate cancer testing, after Olympic cycling champ Sir Chris Hoy said younger men should be tested to prevent cases like his terminal cancer diagnosis.

A couple reporters for NPR visit Beijing from a seat of their bicycles.

Australia’s National Territory wants to tell you about five great bike rides in Canberra, for your next visit Down Under.

 

Competitive Cycling

Forty-year old four-time Tour de France champ Chris Froome says he’s coming back next year to give it one more try.

 

Finally…

If you’re carrying meth and drug paraphernalia on your bike, put a damn light on it — the bike, not the meth. Now you, too, can build your own pointlessly long mountain bike requiring rope reins to ride.

And nothing like a bridge designed to “enable sustainable transport and reduce car use,” which bans bicycles anyway.

………

Be safe, and stay healthy. And get vaccinated, already.

Oh, and fuck Putin